Right now I have a group project to do which requires some material to be presented to a larger group and my group has decided to script what we're saying using Google Docs. I have one group member whose English is not very good and has asked us to please correct grammar or any other parts which seem troubling.

My question is should I just go straight in and start correcting or utilize the Comments feature? I feel like if I go straight in it seems a little too abrupt and a little brash (especially when there are quite a few areas that I think could use some improvement) but if I just make comments I'm merely pointing out her errors and not actually doing anything.

We get a lot of students who speak English as their second language and I usually just correct it without commentating and use the comments to clarify issues. However if someone hasn't even given it a good attempt and I had to correct most of it, I would be annoyed. I also find if I use track changes it can make the document look confusing if there has been a lot of changes.

1. Use Track Changes, as Beetee suggested. It works the same way as just changing, but it shows her where her mistakes were (and how you fixed them).

2. If you don't have Track Changes available, then use the comment feature to point out mistakes for the first part. (I usually do it for the first page of an essay, but you could also do paragraph.) After that, just correct them without commenting.

3. Either way, offer some general comments at the end to help her focus her revisions in the future. What errors is she making over and over? For instance, maybe she keeps shifting verb tenses or has a tendency to use too many commas. Let her know so she knows what to look for when she does her own proofreading. You can probably just be direct and simple for most mistakes. ("Watch out for run-on sentences.") Use examples and more detail if it is something more obscure, like using the wrong word. ("In most cases, 'affect' is the verb and 'effect' is the noun. You got them mixed up twice, once on page 2 and once on page .")

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I would say don't use the Comments for things where it's just a simple change and there isn't really any question about what she meant. She has already asked for help. And it will just take time to have a conversation.

Track Changes might be helpful.

And you can add a Comment when you have a question about what she meant, or when you think you might want to explain why. But correcting the spelling, or idiom, or fixing the grammar? Just do it. Don't even bother Tracking.